+ All Categories
Home > Documents >  · Web viewThe inspiration of Charles Darwin Talk for Eton 19.10.2015 Dr Carolyn Boulter Why I am...

 · Web viewThe inspiration of Charles Darwin Talk for Eton 19.10.2015 Dr Carolyn Boulter Why I am...

Date post: 31-Jan-2020
Category:
Upload: others
View: 0 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
13
The inspiration of Charles Darwin Talk for Eton 19.10.2015 Dr Carolyn Boulter Why I am interested in Darwin My grandfather was born in 1879, twenty years after the publication of Charles Darwin’s great book “ On the Origin of Species” and he, like Darwin, would love to talk with young people about ideas of all sorts, - in his case contrasting new origami models and his theories on the lost city of Atlantis and the fourth dimension with Darwin’s theories of evolution along the way! When I was 11 he gave me his Baker brass microscope made in 1860. It is very similar to the one that Darwin ordered 1847 from James Smith to help him to dissect the barnacles from the seashore rocks sent him from across the world by post. With his microscope Darwin, like my 11 year old self, could magnify if a bit fuzzily the internal organs of the small specimens about 850 times. He used it in his study at Downe House where he lived with his family and it took 8 years to make a complete survey of all the known barnacles with the purpose of using the evidence in his book in order to make the argument of what he called “ descent with modification”. This was his great achievement to provide a mechanism for evolution - species change or as he called his secret notebook on the subject “ ...the transmutation of species”. Along with the microscope was his facsimile of Darwin’s Origin of Species. Darwin Inspired Learning So started my journey as a biologist and my lifelong fascination with Darwin and the reason I am here with you tonight . But it is also why I was taken on by the Charles Darwin Trust for 6 years as an educational consultant, running workshops and writing materials that are designed to use Darwin’s life and work as an inspiration for science education. You can find those materials online at the Linnaean and STEM websites on your sheet. The last published unit was written by myself on Darwins Brilliant Barnacles and gets 6 th form pupils to assess the observational methods Darwin used including microscopy to compare different barnacles classify them and create a 1
Transcript
Page 1:  · Web viewThe inspiration of Charles Darwin Talk for Eton 19.10.2015 Dr Carolyn Boulter Why I am interested in Darwin My grandfather was born in 1879, twenty years after the publication

The inspiration of Charles Darwin

Talk for Eton 19.10.2015 Dr Carolyn Boulter

Why I am interested in Darwin

My grandfather was born in 1879, twenty years after the publication of Charles Darwin’s great book “ On the Origin of Species” and he, like Darwin, would love to talk with young people about ideas of all sorts, - in his case contrasting new origami models and his theories on the lost city of Atlantis and the fourth dimension with Darwin’s theories of evolution along the way! When I was 11 he gave me his Baker brass microscope made in 1860. It is very similar to the one that Darwin ordered 1847 from James Smith to help him to dissect the barnacles from the seashore rocks sent him from across the world by post. With his microscope Darwin, like my 11 year old self, could magnify if a bit fuzzily the internal organs of the small specimens about 850 times. He used it in his study at Downe House where he lived with his family and it took 8 years to make a complete survey of all the known barnacles with the purpose of using the evidence in his book in order to make the argument of what he called “ descent with modification”. This was his great achievement to provide a mechanism for evolution - species change or as he called his secret notebook on the subject “ ...the transmutation of species”.

Along with the microscope was his facsimile of Darwin’s Origin of Species.

Darwin Inspired Learning

So started my journey as a biologist and my lifelong fascination with Darwin and the reason I am here with you tonight . But it is also why I was taken on by the Charles Darwin Trust for 6 years as an educational consultant, running workshops and writing materials that are designed to use Darwin’s life and work as an inspiration for science education. You can find those materials online at the Linnaean and STEM websites on your sheet. The last published unit was written by myself on Darwins Brilliant Barnacles and gets 6th form pupils to assess the observational methods Darwin used including microscopy to compare different barnacles classify them and create a family tree of the group using his evidence. This work allowed him to suggest the evolutionary progress of the barnacle group and how new species might have emerged. This went on to form a major plank in his long argument in the Origin that what is known as natural selection is the mechanism by which new species arise.

The unit goes on to address another very important aspect of Darwin’s work that we have looked at already tonight and that George has introduced us to, that of the inspiration his work gives to contemporary science. Our units pick this up and this one goes on to use the data of new modern molecular evidence produced by biochemists today to provide a computer generated maximum likelihood consensus tree showing how the various features might be resolved into a family tree of relationships through time. Then our unit shows students current observational work on the feeding hairs of barnacles which uses the scanning electron microscope (this can magnify with good resolution up to 5 times further than the light microscope) to suggest further modifications to the family tree.

1

Page 2:  · Web viewThe inspiration of Charles Darwin Talk for Eton 19.10.2015 Dr Carolyn Boulter Why I am interested in Darwin My grandfather was born in 1879, twenty years after the publication

Darwin’s argument in The Origin

His argument in the Origin went as follows: in the huge numbers of offspring of one species there was variation produced due to an as yet unknown process and that only those best adapted would survive the effects of natural selection by predators, climate and competition to reproduce themselves and endow the next generation with their new modification. By this slow accumulation of adaptive characteristics species change would gradually occur over vast eons of time. Both evolution and this explanatory mechanism are accepted by practising scientists today and the missing gap in the explanation - the production of the variations has been shown to be the genetic processes taking place when cells divide and combine in reproduction.

The Scientific understanding of Darwin’s time: Fixed created species

But the scientific understanding of Darwin’s time was that each species of plant and animal though there might be local variation, was fixed and unchangeable having been independently created perfectly adapted to its particular environment by the Deity. It is likely with his training for the Anglican ministry that when Darwin boarded The Beagle which sailed round the world 1831-1836 to accompany the Captain Fitzroy he held these views like his captain and his peers:

Whilst on board the Beagle I was quite orthodox, and I remember being heartily laughed at by several of the officers (though themselves orthodox) for quoting the Bible as an unanswerable authority on some point of morality. Autobiography by Frances Darwin

Indeed this is similar to the views of some religious groups today who hold that the Bible should be read literally as plain truth and that it shows that God has created each species independently for each habitat and that they do not change.

Reflecting on his visit to the Brazilian rain forest early in the voyage in his autobiography edited by Nora Barlow in 1958 he was filled with religious awe :

Formerly I was led by feelings such as those just referred to, (although I do not think that the religious sentiment was ever strongly developed in me), to the firm conviction of the existence of God, and of the immortality of the soul. In my journal I wrote that whilst standing in the midst of the grandeur of a Brazilian forest, 'it is not possible to give an adequate idea of the higher feelings of wonder, admiration, and devotion which fill and elevate the mind.'

Reading on the voyage

He took with him on the voyage William Paley’s Natural Theology (1802). Paley was a believer in this independent special creation but importantly also captivated Darwin by his detailed descriptions of the adaptations in plants and animals. This inspired Darwin to observe closely and note the adaptations he observed.

He also took Sir Charles Lyell’s Principles of Geology which contradicted the commonly held view that the earth was only a few thousand years old and that cataclysms like the flood had formed the appearance of the geology of the rocks (Still an enduring idea with some religious groups . See Norah’s Ark Farm Park near Bristol). Instead Lyell wrote that geological features were entirely natural and mostly caused by gradual processes over long periods of time. He began as Darwin’s

2

Page 3:  · Web viewThe inspiration of Charles Darwin Talk for Eton 19.10.2015 Dr Carolyn Boulter Why I am interested in Darwin My grandfather was born in 1879, twenty years after the publication

mentor at Cambridge and became one of his close friends. During the voyage Darwin’s eyes were open to see the effects of slow changes over eons of time and in some places to see the catastrophic effects of volcanic and seismic activity eg in the Galapagos.

The young man who set off on the voyage of collection round the world in his “gap years” was an unlikely candidate for becoming the “father of Biology” and paradigm-changer spoken of in the same breath as Galileo. His father said of him at 16: "You care for nothing but shooting, dogs and rat-catching, and you will be a disgrace to yourself and all your family." He had not enjoyed the content of his two university courses – medicine at Edinburgh Theology at Cambridge, but he was in many ways well prepared for the experience of the voyage- he read widely and he had been encouraged to think independently.

Darwins religious heritage

Darwin came from a family of non-conformists, or dissenters from the prevailing Anglicanism. His grandfather Erasmus had worked with the idea of evolution and the family were Unitarian as were many of their friends. They were strong supporters of the scientific quest for knowledge and the desire for human progress and were Deist rather than Trinitarian in their outlook. The family had a strong tradition of independent thought and a deep social conscience especially the campaign for the abolition of slavery. It was common for such families to ally themselves with the Anglican Church through baptism and attendance as the Darwins of Charles generation did. This was the gateway to academic and social acceptance. So he carried with him this religious background with him as he set off on the Beagle- Unitarian ideals and training in Anglicanism.

His heritage also meant he had deep fascination with the natural world and how it worked. Since a child he had been a keen collector and on the seashore in Edinburgh where he studied medicine for a while and he probably had his first serious brush with barnacles under the Instruction of Robert Grant who collected sea sponges. Then at Cambridge whilst studying theology it was beetle collecting and geology expeditions.

Collecting and observing, theorising, note taking and questioning became hall marks of his method on the Beagle fuelled by the comparisons he could make across habitats together with his reading and his family inheritance of thinking outside the box. So we find Darwin on The Beagle with his eye sharpened and his mind prepared to see the discontinuities in the geology, the plants and animals he encountered on his voyage round the world, so that when he returned he could open his Transmutation notebook and begin to crystalise his big idea, what Richard Dawkins refers to as his “dangerous idea” of species changing and evolving through natural selection. As his notebook amassed more evidence for his argument in the Origin, his belief in God remained but it was not inspired by literal interpretation the text of the Bible but by the text of nature and the experience of the natural world.

The inspiration of Darwin

For Science

I have suggested that Darwin’s big idea continues to be an inspiration for modern science. Marking the millennium Steve Rose remarked:

3

Page 4:  · Web viewThe inspiration of Charles Darwin Talk for Eton 19.10.2015 Dr Carolyn Boulter Why I am interested in Darwin My grandfather was born in 1879, twenty years after the publication

“Darwin’s theory of common descent does for biology what Galileo did for the planets. It was laid out in a book written for the general reader, the only best seller to change man’s conception of himself. An idea put forward in 1859 is still the cement that binds the marvellous discoveries of today. The Origin of Species is, without doubt the book of millennium.”

For education

I have touched on the ways in which Darwin can inspire science education through my brief description of the unit on barnacles which uses Darwin’s organism and ways of working connecting the work to the inspiration for scientists today. I could give examples of work with bees, with carnivorous and climbing plants and pigeons- all on the websites. Ann analysis what we call Darwin Inspired learning was published this year with worldwide contributions from educators of many kinds who have used Darwins work and ways of working as an inspiration for their work.

The science versus religion debate: Working towards dialogue

We all know that what came in the wake of the publication of his big idea was a tremendous public debate in which science and religion were seen to be set in opposition to each other in 1860 at the meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of science in Oxford when Bishop Samuel Wilberforce challenged Darwin’s friend Thomas Huxley who was supposed to have been asked if he was descended from an ape on his grandmothers or grandfathers side. Ian Barbour in his 1990 Gifford Lectures that dealt with the conflict of science and religion and suggested us moving through from conflict to independence to dialogue and then to integration or synthesis. There is still conflict but there is also much possibility of dialogue, which is I hope what will happen tonight.

It is Keith Ward’s view that : “That science and religion are in conflict is a distorted view of what actually happened. The conflict on each occasion was between traditional science and new science and there were religious believers on both sides of the conflict every time”

This makes sense when we consider that Darwin’s long argument was against the prevailing independent special creation and the immutability of species. The scientific community today accepts the Neo-Darwinian view of species change through natural processes and there are many people of faith within that community.

This discussion has been convened in an interfaith setting and I feel our task is to discuss the faith issues that arise as we try to dialogue both with each other and with the way science reads the text of nature after Darwin and the ways in which we read our scriptural texts. For those of us today who hold no religious views or are humanist, agnostic or atheist, I ask you to bear with me as I try to unpick how I think Darwin inspires and challenges those of faith of whom I am one and how current representative Christian theologians have responded. I will leave those of other faiths here to speak for themselves it is quite beyond my capacity or brief to do so.

Darwins struggle with religion

So lets begin this task with Darwins own religious understandings , having explored already some of his heritage and work. Darwin wrote little about his own religious ideas considering it personal and not liking to be controversial but his autobiography written at the end of his life and published by his son after his death then re-edited by his granddaughter in a fuller form in 1958, gives some insights into his spiritual convictions which he struggled to describe.

4

Page 5:  · Web viewThe inspiration of Charles Darwin Talk for Eton 19.10.2015 Dr Carolyn Boulter Why I am interested in Darwin My grandfather was born in 1879, twenty years after the publication

When thus reflecting I feel compelled to look at a first cause having an intelligent mind in some degree analogous to that of man; and I deserve to be called a theist. This conclusion was strong in my mind about the time, as far I can remember, when I wrote the Origin of species; and it is since that time that it has very gradually with many fluctuations become weaker.

Keith Ward

So how have modern theologians been challenged and inspired by Darwin? I shall start with the work of Keith Ward who I quoted earlier, an Anglican priest and theologian and Regius Professor of Diviniy at Oxford.

Trying to describe what God is : The cosmic mind and theist evolution

Like Darwin, Professor Ward describes himself as a theist and imagines something he calls the “cosmic mind” and believes that this closely connects with the purpose of the cosmos:

The basis theistic hypothesis is that there is a personal explanation for the universe as a whole. The universe exists in order to realise values that are envisaged by something akin to a cosmic mind...the universe exists because it realises values conceived by God that can only exists in such a universe and which perhaps in their general nature are necessarily emergent from the reality of God itself”

He sees the questions about the purpose of the cosmos being questions for theology and faith and the questions of mechanism and cause those of science. He is attempting to frame a worldview that takes both seriously responding to the challenge and inspiration of Darwin.

“Darwinism asks about the causal processes by which states of affairs have come into being. The other asks about the purpose for which they have come into being....... they are complementary forms of explanation.”

“ Both seek an adequate understanding of what the universe is like. One looks to objective, dispassionate, quantifiable and publically accessible evidence. The other looks to the data of subjective experience, of feeling, evaluation, intention and obligation which require a more engaged and intuitive approach....theistic evolution allows a prospect of framing an integrated worldview that takes both traditions with equal seriousness.

God is within the cosmos and also outside time

The conception of the nature of God perceived by Ward is both within the cosmos and the minutia of the world and yet outside of time. Within the cosmos God’s creative activity from within brings the universe into being through its own innate capacity to evolve through natural processes. Because God is mature love God brings freedom to evolve. And God is also simultaneously outside of time. It is a massive expansion in thinking that is akin to that required by modern physics.

“ God can enter into many different times , acting and responding in them while also existing in a trans-temporal way. We cannot imagine this trans-temporality of god but it should not be conceived as a totally immutable and static existence. It might better be conceived as a transcendent agency that acts incessantly in many temporal streams, manifesting its changeless perfection in continual creative activity, sensitive awareness and over-flowing goodness.”

God emerges through the evolutionary process

5

Page 6:  · Web viewThe inspiration of Charles Darwin Talk for Eton 19.10.2015 Dr Carolyn Boulter Why I am interested in Darwin My grandfather was born in 1879, twenty years after the publication

The development of life and the evolution of living forms that Darwin describes is one of emergence of new forms and of consciousness and the capacity to think these ideas expressed today. For Ward because God is within the process of evolution at all levels God experiences the necessary pain and suffering of the process because that is the way emergence works. Without pain and death there can be no new life. He almost goes as far as to say that God emerges through this process.

“Pain is involved in the emergent physical being of universes like this and even God who experiences all actualities must share it if such a universe is actualised”

This brings us to one of Darwin’s questions again:

After the publication of the Origin amidst the fury generated by the Oxford meeting Darwin was in correspondence with Asa Gray an American botanist, in which the question of the providence of the God who Gray believed in was raised:

I cannot persuade myself that a beneficent and omnipotent God would have designedly created the Ichneumonidae with the express intention of their feeding within the living bodies of Caterpillars, or that a cat should play with mice "Letter 2814 — Darwin, C. R. to Gray, Asa, 22 May [1860]"

John Haught

With that thought in mind I shall turn to the second theologian that I shall quote Professor John Haught from Georgetown, USA. Like Ward, Haught recognises that science and theology represent two distinct horizons for looking at the story of life and the universe and wants to integrate them into a synthetic vision .

God allows the self determination and independence of creation

Haught writes in Darwin Design and Divine Providence

“Theologically speaking, therefore the vastness of evolutionary duration, the spontaneity of random variations or mutations, and even the automatic machinations of natural selection could be thought of as essential ingredients in the emergence of cosmic independence.”

God is love and allows, in fact is embedded in, the self determination of evolution and the emergence of new forms. Gods allows the universe to freely become itself.

“ a theology after Darwin also argues that divine providence influences the world in a persuasive rather than a coercive way. Since God is love and not domineering force, the world must be endowed with inner spontaneity and self-creativity that allows it “to become itself” and thus participate in the adventure of its own creation”

God is self giving love Divine Kenosis

For Haught divine providence is self- giving love , that is the nature of God and is what is within and behind evolution and that as Ward has pointed out involves suffering and pain which is part of the nature of the process and the nature of God. A God of this nature wants creatures to be themselves and become, and the process involves suffering pain and death.

6

Page 7:  · Web viewThe inspiration of Charles Darwin Talk for Eton 19.10.2015 Dr Carolyn Boulter Why I am interested in Darwin My grandfather was born in 1879, twenty years after the publication

This concept is mirrored by my final theological quote from John Polkinghorne the Anglican priest theologian and physicist

“ An extremely important aspect of twentieth century theology has been the recognition that creation is an act of divine Kenosis, God’s self limitation in allowing the creaturely other to be and to make itself.”

So I hope that I have provided enough to inspire and challenge you to share from your own positions of religious faith or otherwise.

In summary I see the inspiration from Darwin and the challenges it poses for faith as being:

Darwin’s close attention to the Book of Nature and rejection of the plain reading of the Book of Scripture challenges us to consider how we read our own scriptures in the light of the discoveries of science.

Darwin’s use of species change in his theory challenges the concept of God’s ex machina intervention to create a independent species in a special perfect creation and to consider the, liberating nature of God

Darwins theory of natural selection as the mechanism for evolution challenges the idea of a providential God who does not suffer and encourages us to consider the nature of God as self emptying love.

As people of faith we are challenged to consider the purpose of evolution in a way which is in unison with science

As people of faith we are rightly challenged to consider in the light of the above, the purpose of the creation and the beginning and ending of time.

A small fragment of one of my own poems:

When the time is right-When it is possible,God becomes and makes anewAnd the radiance spills out to make the angels shout. CJB

The last paragraph of the Origin in 1860

There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed by the Creator into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being, evolved.

7

Page 8:  · Web viewThe inspiration of Charles Darwin Talk for Eton 19.10.2015 Dr Carolyn Boulter Why I am interested in Darwin My grandfather was born in 1879, twenty years after the publication

The inspiration of Darwin for science, education and faithDr Carolyn Boulter

Bibliography

Ian Barbour (2000) “When science meets religion” Harper Collins: London

Janet Browne (2002) “Charles Darwin: The Power of Place” Random: London

Francis Darwin “The Life of Charles Darwin” Tiger : London Reprint of 1902 edition in 1995

Charles Darwin (1958) (With original omissions restored. Edited with Appendix and Notes by his grand-daughter Nora Barlow). “The Autobiography of Charles Darwin 1809-1882”Collins:London

William Dembski and Michael Ruse (eds) (2004) “Debating Design: From Darwin to DNA”. Cambridge University Press.

Randal Keynes (2002) “Darwin his daughter and human evolution” Riverhead: New York

Mark Isaak (2005) “The Counter Creationism Handbook” Univeristy of California Press: London

Elizabeth Johnson (2014) “Ask the beasts:Darwin and the God of Love” Bloomsbury:London

Mary Midgley (2007) “Intelligent Design Theory and other ideological problems” Philosophy of great Britain Society Impact pamphlet No 15

John Polkingthorne (1983) “The way the world is: The Christian perspective of a scientist” SPCK;London

Clifford Reed (2011) “Till the peoples are one- Darwins Unitarian connections” Lindsay Press: London

Ruth Scott (200£) “Darwin and the barnacle” Faber and Faber: London

Keith Ward (2006) “Pascal’s Fire: Scientific Faith and Religious Understanding” One world: Oxford

Websites for all Darwin manuscripts online and Darwin Correspondence Project of all letters

http://darwin-online.org.uk/

http://darwinproject.ac.uk

8

Page 9:  · Web viewThe inspiration of Charles Darwin Talk for Eton 19.10.2015 Dr Carolyn Boulter Why I am interested in Darwin My grandfather was born in 1879, twenty years after the publication

The inspiration of Darwin for science, education and faith

Dr Carolyn Boulter

http://www.linnean.org/Education+Resources/Secondary_Resources/darwin_inspired_learning

http://www.nationalstemcentre.org.uk/elibrary/collection/1459/darwin-inspired-secondary-school-materials

Carolyn Boulter, Michael Reiss, Dawn Sanders (2015)

“Darwin-Inspired Learning” Sense : Rotterdam

9

Barnacles feeding

Ichneumen wasp lays eggs in a caterpillar

Page 10:  · Web viewThe inspiration of Charles Darwin Talk for Eton 19.10.2015 Dr Carolyn Boulter Why I am interested in Darwin My grandfather was born in 1879, twenty years after the publication

10


Recommended